The Freeman

No one objected to Dengvaxia use

- (Philstar.com)

MANILA — No one came forward to express their objection against dengue vaccine Dengvaxia when the previous administra­tion decided to roll out its national immunizati­on program, former president Benigno Aquino III said yesterday.

Facing the Senate Blue Ribbon and Health committees, Aquino defended his administra­tion's controvers­ial dengue vaccinatio­n program, which was launched in April 2016.

"Before the government decided on Dengvaxia, while deciding, and even after deciding, no one came to me with objection to the vaccine," Aquino told the Senate panel.

It came to his understand­ing that the efficacy and safety of the vaccine had been cleared by the US Food and Drug Administra­tion, he added.

The former president also stressed that Mexico and Brazil had approved the vaccine before the Philippine­s.

In his opening speech, Aquino admitted that he had met with executives of pharmaceut­ical giant Sanofi Pasteur at the sidelines of the climate change conference in Paris in December 2015.

"We were told that Sanofi was ready for the vaccine," Aquino said.

Aquino said that such type of medicine takes years to develop to ensure its efficacy and safety as it undergoes five steps under the US FDA.

"It is our understand­ing that the local and internatio­nal processes of Dengvaxia had been completed," the former president said.

The Department of Health launched the vaccine program in Metro Manila, Central Luzon and the CALABARZON region as these are the top three regions affected by dengue based on 2015 data, according to Aquino.

Defending his administra­tion's vaccine program, Aquino stressed that it was the government's obligation to ensure the safety of its citizens.

“Those who have less in life should have more in law," Aquino said, quoting former president Ramon Magsaysay.

"I did not think of denying vaccine protection to those who most need it," he said.

Earlier this month, the DOH suspended its dengue vaccinatio­n program following an analysis from Sanofi Pasteur that Dengvaxia poses risk to people without prior infection.

The Senate joint inquiry is looking into the possible irregulari­ties in the implementa­tion of the Aquino administra­tion's P3.5-billion dengue vaccinatio­n program.

In 2015, Aquino ordered the realignmen­t of the vaccinatio­n fund from the budget to purchase three million doses of Dengvaxia from Sanofi Pasteur.

 ?? PHILSTAR.COM
SENATE PRIB/ ?? Former president Noynoy Aquino, together with former Executive Secretary Paquito Ochoa and former Budget Secretary Butch Abad took their oath during the hearing on the alleged P3.5 billion worth of questionab­le dengue vaccines that had been...
PHILSTAR.COM SENATE PRIB/ Former president Noynoy Aquino, together with former Executive Secretary Paquito Ochoa and former Budget Secretary Butch Abad took their oath during the hearing on the alleged P3.5 billion worth of questionab­le dengue vaccines that had been...

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